Design for Living: Regard Concern Service and Love


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About The Book

Written in 1954 but unpublished in his lifetime Robert Friedmanns Design for Living asks that pertinent existential question: how should we live? Drawing on literary philosophical and theological sources Friedmanns answer begins with a critique of utilitarian ethics and popular apathy and proceeds through an existential preparation that ascends in confessional style to the question of the meaning of human life culminating in a fourfold set of principles: regard concern service and love. Along the way Friedmanns critical eye remains clearly fixed on his object of study--lived experience and not abstract principles detached from day-to-day life--and he intentionally guides his reader step by step up the mountain of spiritual and ethical inquiry in a deliberate and serious attempt to educate the heart mind and soul. At once accessible and scholarly while troubling our contemporary divide between religion and the secular Design for Living presents a rare vision of human meaning and purpose that will appeal to scholarly and public readers alike. Friedmann writes lucidly with a free-flowing style and above all with keen and empathetic discernment as a man who has cut for himself a broad swath of life has drunk deeply at its richest sources and overlooks the highest peaks of human aspiration as well as its illusions and pitfalls. --Clarence Bauman (1928-1995) Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary Design for Living addresses the essentials of life itself communicated on each page by the authors distinctive and profound voice. Although he proceeds philosophically Friedmann dares to address the limitations of his own discipline touching on those rare instances of in-breaking love the living nature of which transcends human reason. --Leonard Gross Executive Director emeritus Mennonite Church Historical Committee This book could have been called The Educated Heart (the title of chapter 1) which Friedmann calls the singular topic of his work. That would gesture more fully at the existential and spiritual impetus of this secular work by a philosophical historian influenced by the Anabaptists who identified himself as a Jew who sides with Christ. Education of the heart is now as ever what it is all about and Friedmanns work helps show us why. Kudos to Max Kennel for bringing this work into the public domain. --P. Travis Kroeker Professor of Religious Studies McMaster University Robert Friedmann (1891-1970) was a Mennonite historian known for his work in Mennonite Piety Through the Centuries (1949) Hutterite Studies (1961) and The Theology of Anabaptism (1973). He taught at Goshen College and Western Michigan University. Maxwell Kennel is a doctoral student in religious studies at McMaster University.
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